On a recent Saturday morning, after pursuing my bookshelf for a thoughtful read, I pulled out Walter Lippmann’s “Public ...
In an era of fragmented values and the rise of social media influencers, Andrew Tate has emerged as a polarizing figure ...
What distinguishes fiction from nonfiction? The answer to this perennial question relies on how we understand reality itself ...
​​"Have we really done it?" Tessa Moura Lacerda asked her mother, in disbelief, as they stood outside a government office on ...
So why on earth are students signing up to endure the discomforts of the classroom, the precarity of their job markets, and ...
Although the 13 United States Courts of Appeals are the final word on 99 percent of all federal cases, there is no detailed ...
Prof K S Chandrasekar Swami Vivekananda who left us at the age of thirty-nine, gave each of us the lessons of practical ...
You can’t eat a flag” is one of the most brilliantly succinct summations of a political philosophy — and if John Hume’s ...
Opinion
The right to be wrong
Increasingly, it seems as if moral certainty and intellectual omniscience have become compulsory attributes that every citizen is expected to possess ...
It is always good to see someone wrestling with truth. A progressive columnist in The Guardian writes about how she is coming to understand that human life has intrinsic dignity, but she doesn’t quite ...
“It goes to show, Ivan thinks, that the difference between truth and lying is complicated ... Russell deplored the idea, and thought it was taking philosophy in terrible directions.” ...
Carl R. Trueman’s book is a microcosm of the American political world with as much disguised hatred as analytical thought.